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Tag: local strategy

7 Common Localised Marketing Mistakes your Franchise might be Making

Posted on February 28, 2022November 2, 2022 by Andras Tasi
7 Common Localised Marketing Mistakes your Franchise might be Making

Investing in your own franchise is an exciting prospect that comes with so many opportunities to start a business that performs well and reaches its full potential. One of the earliest starting points for maximising your business potential is with your marketing strategy, but marketing is ultimately only as effective as its execution. Carefully considering the methods, strategy, experience, and message being sent to future and existing customers can make or break the possible success of your franchise.

Here are seven common marketing mistakes we want YOU to avoid so your brand and business performs to the best of their ability.
 

Poor research

Before launching a marketing campaign, you need to understand your customers. Regardless of your campaign’s purpose – building brand awareness, increasing engagement, generating leads, etc. — it must consider the audience and what motivates them.
It is important to initially research the area you are looking to perform in and then do further testing.
To test different messages and offers across various marketing channels – such as email newsletters, social, direct mail, etc. – so you can see how they perform before increasing your effort and budget into a campaign. It is commonly called A/B testing. Once you have found a successful campaign, you can scale it to reap the benefits. But do not stop there. Marketing is an ongoing effort. Begin a new set of messages and tests to fine-tune performance across channels.
 

Broad targeting

New tools and platforms allow for highly targeted campaigns. Your advertising should not take a “spray-and-pray” approach.

Fortunately, identifying the core audience for your business is easier now than it has ever been. With the wealth of data and information available on social media, businesses can get a clear, comprehensive picture of their core audience. This gives you an idea of what gender, age group and geographical area are most likely to interact with your business, and targeting can even be narrowed down to the particular social media platform and the best time of day to promote to your audience. Pairing the insights from research with data-backed targeting is a winning combination.
 

Lack of USP

Your unique selling position, or USP, is the ultimate reason customers should buy from you and not someone else. This is what sets your products or services apart from those of your competitors. Your USP should be the central theme of all your marketing efforts, regardless of what you are intending to achieve with a particular campaign.

Many businesses think they are accomplishing a USP by saying things like “better,” “top-rated,” “most valuable” and other unsubstantiated claims about the superiority of the product or service. These types of vague phrases do not help your customer understand how your product or service will benefit them, so they do nothing to separate your brand from the competitors.
 

Failing to earn repeat customers

It can be seen that in business, 80% of sales and profits come from existing customers, while the other 20% comes from new customers buying for the first time. If you fail to retarget your current customer base to get them to buy again, it could put a significant dent in your profits.

Selling to a new customer is five times more expensive than selling to an existing customer, so do not forget to designate a few of your marketing campaigns toward your existing customer base to get the repeat sale. By doing this, you will not only attract a wider audience of potential buyers, but you’ll also make sure that you are devoting enough of your efforts to the core of your customer base.
 

Unwilling to invest

It is a common hurdle: they have the budget, but they do not invest it in marketing. In fact, recent studies show that at every life stage, business owners wish they invested more in marketing. From their first year in business to their 20th year (or more) businesses on average allocated 10% of their budget to marketing when they wished they had invested 25% or more.

New funding platforms on the market make it easier for businesses to get the capital they need to invest in marketing. In some cases, businesses can get approved for funding in minutes and have access to funds the same day. Do not let a lack of budget prevent you from securing high ROI opportunities.
 

Not tracking performance

Modern technology has made it easier than ever to keep track of your customers’ behaviour and use it to your advantage. Unfortunately, many businesses use this data to craft marketing campaigns they believe will perform well, but then they fail to track the performance to identify areas for improvement.

With all this technology, you can track every aspect of your marketing campaigns, so there’s no reason you should not know where you have succeeded and where you can improve. Before launching a campaign, be sure to set clearly defined performance goals at the start so that you always have an idea of how your campaign is performing. Otherwise, you will just be throwing money at campaigns that could be better spent elsewhere.
 

Being unwilling to adapt

Just like people, businesses need to grow and evolve if they want to succeed. Businesses unwilling to include recent technology, try out new platforms or experiment with new audiences are unlikely to stay profitable in the ever-changing business world. The most successful companies do whatever they can to tailor their marketing strategies to accommodate different trends and reach new prospects. By experimenting with different social media channels or marketing strategies and techniques you can reach a wider audience and maximise your potential profits.

You can download our Franchise Social Media Checklist to make sure you tick all the boxes 🙂

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7 Common Localised Marketing Mistakes your Franchise might be Making
Read more
Andras Tasi
February 28, 2022
5 Ways you Can Maximise your Franchises Potential with Multi-Location Marketing
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February 28, 2022
Social Media is teamwork: Three features for better social media team collaboration
Managing social media accounts can be challenging, especially if you are doing it for a brand or franchise with multiple location pages. It means you have to work with people that are not geographically in the same area. Read more
Norbert Juhasz
April 11, 2019
How do you know which social media management platform is the right one for your multi-location brand or franchise?
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April 4, 2019
Posted in Social media marketingTagged brand social media strategy, franchise, local social media strategy, local strategy, localised social media, multi-location brand

5 Ways you Can Maximise your Franchises Potential with Multi-Location Marketing

Posted on February 28, 2022March 7, 2022 by Andras Tasi
5 Ways you Can Maximise your Franchises Potential with Multi-Location Marketing

Why You Need to Localize Your Marketing

The main aim of any marketing campaign is to create the best return on investment and brands are constantly striving to find the best formula to achieve this. Regardless of industry, the size of your business, or your approach, there is one key aspect that creates successful marketing and advertising:
 The more targeted your content, the more it resonates.

Initially, marketing a multi-location business seems similar to marketing a single-location business. After all, the goals are the same—building awareness, spark action, increasing sales—so the approaches should also be the same, right? Wrong.
While there is some overlap in methods, there is also a few things that are quite different about multi-location and franchise marketing. In working with clients, we have consistently seen marketing campaigns not reaching their full potential because these differences have not been incorporated.

So, we have produced this article as a resource for you so that your business does not fall into the pitfalls that many other brands commonly do. Specifically, we have found that multi-location firms can be significantly helped by utilising these 6 methods:
 

 1. Localizing Your Web Offerings
 We get it: as a franchise you have multiple stores or offices offering the same products and/or services, because of that it is a common misconception that it will be easier to have one single page to that lists all your locations, however this is not the case. Although this can seem efficient, the problem is that search engines and other online platforms do not operate in this way. They are set up to serve consumers information for specific locations, as well as for the overarching business. As social media becomes more and more focused on the individual, national ‘broadcasts’ from large companies are becoming less productive. Local messages directly from the branches your customer knows are having a far greater effect.

That is why developing localized web offerings is so important. This does not mean you have to create a separate website for every location—that can be a step too far—but it does mean that each location should have its own social media page or account that is tailored to the location and includes things like the phone number, address, images, offers, and reviews.

Managing and maintaining multiple social media accounts without dropping your companies’ standards can become a long arduous task IF you are doing it the difficult way. Esemdee offers the solution to this and is the best way to avoid the challenges that come with multi-location social media accounts as it is the most powerful social media creation, management and tracking platform for all companies. With Esemdee you can manage all of your social media in one location making your job much more efficient. Furthermore, Esemdee and its easy use give you the power to effectively manage accounts, build and execute strategies, efficiently schedule posts and quickly construct updates to bring your business profile to the forefront.
 

2. Keeping Consistent branding
 Here’s where things can start to get confusing: while you want each of your locations to have its own presence and relate to the demographic and target audience of each location, it is also imperative that your branding is consistent.

You want to ensure that your brand value is carried across locations. If consumers have good experiences in one place, you also want them to see your name and logo in another place and clearly make the connection.

By delivering consistently on your company’s tone of voice, brand and ethos in a constructive time frame, you have the opportunity to increase customer trust, company value and brand awareness which will have a subsequent positive effect on customer relations, and customer retention.
 

3. Actively Monitoring and Managing All Your Pages on Review Sites
 Keeping track of what is happening on reviews for one location is stressful enough. Doing the same for multiple locations can feel completely overwhelming. Nevertheless, it is important to consistently monitor and manage all your pages across all the different online platforms.

Why? Because the timing and how your customer service is received really, really matters. If someone provides incorrect details about one of your locations or leaves a disparaging review, the damage can be significant to your entire business. The only way to deal with the issues is to be actively engaging so that you are immediately aware and can respond quickly.

4. Segmenting Your Audiences Properly
 One of the paradoxes of multi-location firms is that the bigger your business gets, the more important it becomes to segment your audiences into smaller and smaller groups.

This is because consumers respond to relevancy. So, while in the beginning it may be okay to send the same email to all subscribers, that approach will increasingly fall flat as you expand into more areas.

For multi-location businesses, the first layer of targeting is typically geography, since you want to deliver messaging and offers only to the local audiences that they apply to. However, you should not stop there. The more you segment—by behaviour, demographics, etc.—the more likely it is that your marketing campaigns will resonate.

Esemdee’s features a flexible report module is essential for this. Different people want to see different information and with the flexible report module, you have the capability to build and create your own reports and save the format to use whenever you want.


5. Examining Analytics for Each Location
 Finally, it is impossible to tell how your campaigns are performing without diving deep into the analytics, but this can feel especially daunting for multi-location businesses. By their very nature, these campaigns are more complex with more offices/stores, more geographies, and more audiences, so it can be tempting to simply look at only top-level results.

It is vital that you avoid that temptation.

Multi-location marketing campaigns yield more data and therefore more potential learnings and chances to increase ROI and success rates. With proper analysis, you could discover if a tactic tried by one location was surprisingly effective or if the wording on a particular geo-targeted ad sparked unexpectedly high conversions. These valuable insights can then be used across further suitable locations.

With Esemdee’s powerful reporting capabilities you can easily see how your social media are performing in separate locations so you can easily tweak and adjust campaigns to become more successful. In seeing how your campaigns are performing you can best plan your marketing strategy to target and re-target followers, traffic, and customers. The best growth comes hand in hand with the best analytics and with Esemdee you have exactly that!

Posted in Social media marketing, UncategorizedTagged brand social media strategy, franchise, local social media strategy, local strategy, localised social media, multi-location brand

Why localised social marketing is important for your brand

Posted on April 1, 2019February 28, 2022 by Norbert Juhasz
Why localised social marketing is important for your brand

Let’s say you are now part of the marketing team of a brand with stores in multiple locations, and your mission is to manage the brand’s online reputation by organising its social media channels. You go on Facebook, search for your company’s page and boom! You enter a very messy universe with many unmanaged location Pages, many of them with inconsistent branding and inaccurate information.  

How do you start to put things together? Well, the first step is to get in contact with local managers to align a localised social strategy for the brand. Find out who is going to be responsible for updating local content, such as promotions, opening hours and events. 

What may seem complicated at first can be an advantage when engaging with customers and attracting more buyers through social media channels.

Why a single brand page doesn’t do the job? 

Businesses have realised that sales are now driven by online reviews and recommendations. However, these reviews are happening at a local level, not at the brand’s page level.  

Surveys reveal that online consumers search for information before they buy. According to Brightlocal’s latest survey, 86% of consumers read local business reviews. In addition, 89% also read business responses, and 91% rely on online reviews as much as recommendations from people they know. 

When a company does not have a specific location Page, customers will create their own page for the business so other local customers can find more information about the store they have visited.  

See the infographic Location Pages vs. Corporate Pages: why multi-store brands and franchises need a localised social media strategy? 

Location Pages vs. Corporate Pages

The Facebook Factor

If you want your multi-location business to succeed it is important to invest time to optimising your Google My Business and Facebook Location Pages, this is because those services are two primary sources of online reviews. 

Facebook pages have less volume of reviews compared to Google my Business, but it is a social network which has more overall engagement. In addition, Facebook is investing heavily in becoming the largest network of word of mouth recommendations for local businesses.  

It has recently replaced its system of reviews by a simple question: “Do you recommend this service?” The idea is to encourage more people to share their experiences. 

The social network allows posts from Brand Pages to appear on Location Pages, but you can also create specific content with promotions and events that are limited to certain stores. The brand Page becomes a large hub of information receiving notifications when people leave messages, ratings, reviews, likes, check-ins and posts on Location Pages.  

Claiming ownership of a Location Page 

If you find an unofficial Location Page on Facebook, you can request to claim the page and become the admin for it.  You are then able to merge the page into a page which you already manage for your business. 

Keep in mind that you may be asked for information to verify your relationship with the business, such as business phone number, business email or documentation. 

Managing multiple pages and teams 

It is a good strategy to invest in a tool to manage your social media profiles. This will make things easier because you can add local people as managers of specific Location Pages and they will be able to use the same template you are using for your brand to create location-specific content. 

A social media management tool can also allow you to schedule, approve and publish content at both Brand and Location Pages. 

Posted in Social media marketingTagged brand social media strategy, franchise, local social media strategy, local strategy, localised social media, multi-location brand

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